| Literature DB >> 27781355 |
José L Zafra1, Lili Qiu2, Naoyuki Yanai3, Takamichi Mori3,4, Masahiro Nakano4, Miriam Peña Alvarez5, Juan T López Navarrete1, Carlos J Gómez-García6, Miklos Kertesz2, Kazuo Takimiya4, Juan Casado1.
Abstract
Conducting polymers can be synthesized by irreversible diradical monomer polymerization. A reversible version of this reaction consisting of the formation/dissociation of σ-dimers and σ-polymers from a stable quinonoidal diradical precursor is described. The reaction reversibility is made by a quinonoidal molecule which changes its structure to an aromatic species by forming weak and long intermolecular C-C single bonds. The reaction provokes a giant chromic effect of about 2.5 eV. The two opposite but complementary quinonoidal and aromatic tautomers provide the Janus faces of the reactants and products which produces the observed chromic effect. A reaction mechanism is proposed to explain the variety of final products starting with structurally very similar reactants. These reversible reactions, covering an unusual regime of weak covalent supramolecular bonding, yield products which might be envisaged as novel molecular and polymeric soft matter phases.Entities:
Keywords: cyclophanes; density functional calculations; radicals; reaction mechanisms; solvatochromism
Year: 2016 PMID: 27781355 DOI: 10.1002/anie.201605997
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ISSN: 1433-7851 Impact factor: 15.336